On Aug 28, 2006, at 3:52 AM, Loren Wilton wrote:
<img src=3D"http://alaska.aif1.com/pr.asp?src=3D1155591075"; width=3D"1" height=3D"1" border=3D"0"/> <img src=3D"http://images.ed4.net/images/htdocs/alaska/ head_left.gif" width=3D"436" height=3D"78"> <a href=3D"http://alaska.aif1.com/pr.asp?src=3D1155591075";><img src=3D"http://images.ed4.net/images/htdocs/alaska/060816/Mexico- Sweep-graphic.jpg" border=3D"0" width=3D"161" height=3D"110"></a></td> <a href=3D"http://alaska.aif1.com/pr.asp?src=";>apply today</a>, then start


These things normally score about 25 points.

none of these should trip phisher's rule -- it should only trip on text that looks like a domain name. (this does leave the door open to a graphic that says "paypal.com" in a typeface that matches the rest of the message.) the only apparently legitimate mail i've received that masks a url is from the aaa, and they seem to switch vendors every couple months, so i'm not inclined to trust anything from them (if i start to do so then when do i know what's real and what's fake?).

-faisal

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